Pine trees provide chapel experience at special times of year
|
A UMNS photo courtesy of Chapel in the Pines Worshippers at Chapel in the Pines sit in wooden pews in a grove of pine trees.
|
Chapel
in the Pines is a ministry of Pell City (Ala.) First United Methodist
Church. Services are held on Logan Martin Lake from May 2 through the
last week in September, with additional Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve
services. The worshippers "come as they are" by boat or automobile. A
UMNS photo courtesy of Chapel in the Pines. Photo #04-526. Accompanies
UMNS story #540, 11/18/04.
|
Nov. 18, 2004 A UMNS Feature By Linda Green* Each
Sunday through Labor Day, a multitude of boats deliver worshippers to
the Chapel in the Pines, an outreach boatdock ministry of an Alabama
United Methodist congregation. At Christmas, the chapel provides a Holy Communion experience outdoors. Chapel
in the Pines is a ministry of Pell City First United Methodist Church,
but the services are nondenominational. They are held on Logan Martin
Lake from May 2 through the last week in September, with additional
Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve services. The worshippers “come as they
are” by boat or automobile. The
40-year-old ministry provides a “wonderful opportunity for people to
worship God in the midst of God’s creation,” says the Rev. Sherri
Reynolds, associate pastor at First Church and supervisor of the chapel.
The name comes from the fact that wooden pews have been placed in a
grove of pine trees. The
pews are made of weathered, treated lumber, and each worshipper has a
square of carpet to sit on to keep clothes clean. Many people attend
wearing shorts, T-shirts and sneakers. In
addition to the chapel, First Church provides “Lessons on the Lake,” a
Sunday school class that junior and senior high school youth attend
while cruising around Logan Martin in pontoon boats. The program began
the first Sunday in August and continues as long as the weather and lake
level permit. The
chapel is most active during the summer months, when crowds swell to
nearly 300. Nearly 100 are expected for the upcoming Christmas Eve
Communion Service in the Pines. Pastors from a variety of
traditions take turns leading the worship services, Reynolds says. “We
have pastors from Methodist, Baptist, Roman Catholic, Presbyterian and
Episcopal churches. I think we have every church in Pell City
represented.”
|
A UMNS photo courtesy of Chapel in the Pines A multitude of boats deliver worshippers to the Chapel in the Pines.
|
Each
Sunday through Labor Day, a multitude of boats deliver worshippers to
the Chapel in the Pines, an outreach boat dock ministry of an Alabama
United Methodist congregation. Services are held on Logan Martin Lake
from May 2 through the last week in September, with additional
Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve services. A UMNS photo courtesy of Chapel in the Pines. Photo #04-527. Accompanies UMNS story #540, 11/18/04.
|
Those attending
the worship services hail from diverse religious backgrounds, and some
attend who may have grown up in a church but have not identified with a
congregation in years. When
the boating and chapel season ends, a third of the parishioners go to
First United Methodist Church in Pell City, a third go to other churches
in the area, and about a third refer to the chapel as their home
congregation, Reynolds says. “The
Chapel in the Pines is our summer outreach program, but there are
people who will tell you that this is their church. ... They see the
chapel as their year-round church and the community of faith they
connect to, and they are the body of Christ to one another and only
attend church during the summer months and at Christmas Eve Communion
and Easter Sunrise Service,” she says. The
chapel’s Christmas Eve Communion Service is designed to minister to
people who come to town to visit their families and want to worship. The
lake level has been lowered for the winter, so people will not attend
this service by boat. As
at other chapel services, an offering will be collected. Church
offerings are donated to charities in the Pell City area. “Most of the
money collected goes back to the community, and about 90 percent goes to
missions,” Reynolds says. “We
keep out enough to pay a small electric bill, a small honorarium to the
pastors that speak and to money to keep the grass cut,” she adds. “Most
Sundays, we give away $750 to a different charity. We give to 10 to 12
charities throughout the year.” The
Chapel in the Pines is a “wonderful outreach for First United Methodist
Church,” she says. “United Methodist churches should be willing to do
ministry to make disciples of Christ by going where the people are. We
cannot expect them to come to the sanctuary.” *Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn. News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
|